United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s address to ...
Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
-
Upload
robert-amsterdam -
Category
Documents
-
view
218 -
download
0
Transcript of Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
1/104
UNITEDNATIONS DISPUTE TRIBUNAL
Case No.: UNDT/NBI/2009/36
Judgment No.: UNDT/2013/032
Date: 26 February 2013
Original: English
Before:Judge Vinod Boolell, PresidingJudge Nkemdilim Izuako
Judge Goolam Meeran
Registry: Nairobi
Registrar: Jean-Pel Fomt
TADONKI
v.
SECRETARY-GENERAL
OF THE UNITED NATIONS
JUDGMENT
Counsel for Applicant:
Robert Amsterdam, Amsterdam & Peroff LLP
Geoff Gelbart, Amsterdam & Peroff LLP
Katy Epstein, Amsterdam & Peroff LLP
Katya Melluish, OSLA
Counsel for Respondent:
Stephen Margetts, ALS/OHRM, UN Secretariat,
Steven Dietrich, ALS/OHRM, UN Secretariat
Adele Grant, ALS/OHRM, UN Secretariat
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
2/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 2 of 104
Introduction
1. The Applicant was appointed as the Head of Office (HoO) for theZimbabwe Office of the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
(OCHA) on 24 March 2008. The Assistant Secretary-General (ASG) of
OCHA, Ms. Catherine Bragg, informed him by an email dated 27 January 2009
that: (i) OCHA would not renew his contract after its expiry on 23 March 2009;
and (ii) he was going to be moved to the OCHA Regional Office in Johannesburg
to take up the position of Senior Humanitarian Affairs Officer until the expiry of
his contract.
2. The Applicant filed a request to the Secretary-General on 27 January 2009
seeking to suspend the implementation of the two administrative decisions.
OCHA subsequently extended his appointment through to 23 April 2009.
3. On 20 April 2009, the Applicant filed another request for suspension of
action challenging the decision not to renew his appointment. Subsequently, his
contract was extended to 29 May 2009. On 27 May 2009, he filed an appeal with
the New York Joint Appeals Board (JAB) challenging the decision by OCHAnot to renew his appointment.
4. In view of the transition to the new system of internal justice this case was
transferred to the United Nations Dispute Tribunal (UNDT or the Tribunal) in
New York on 1 July 2009 in accordance with ST/SGB/2009/11 (Transitional
Measures Related to the Introduction of the New System of Administration of
Justice). On 15 July 2009, the Applicants case was transferred to the Tribunal in
Nairobi and was assigned case number UNDT/NBI/2009/036.
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
3/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 3 of 104
Procedural History
5. On 10 December 2009, the Applicant filed an amended application on themerits. The Registrar transmitted the application to the Respondent for reply
within 30 calendar days.
6. On 4 January 2010, pursuant to article 10.9 of the UNDT Rules ofProcedure, the President of the UNDT requested the President of the United
Nations Appeals Tribunal (the Appeals Tribunal) to refer the case to a panel of
three UNDT judges.
7. On 19 January 2010, the Respondent filed his response to the Applicant'samended application.
8. On 20 January 2010, a Panel of three UNDT judges was constituted.9. On 21 January 2010, a Case Management Discussion (CMD) was heldunder art. 19 of the Rules of Procedure of the Tribunal by the Presiding Judge
with the objective of identifying the issues and to assess the readiness of the case
for a hearing. The Respondent indicated his intention to call four witnesses as part
of his case but did not name them.
10. On 5 February 2010, the Applicant submitted voluminous additionaldocuments, including numerous written testimonies of persons allegedly familiar
with the Applicant's character and professionalism for the consideration of the
Tribunal.
11. On 9 February 2010, the Applicant filed a motion to strike out theRespondent's list of witnesses on the ground that the Respondent had failed to
provide the names of his witnesses within the timeframe requested by the
Tribunal. The Applicant moved the Tribunal to prohibit the Respondent from
calling witnesses to testify for the Respondent at the hearing and to order the
presence of Ms. Catherine Bragg, Assistant Secretary-General of OCHA (ASG
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
4/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 4 of 104
Bragg), Mr. John Holmes, Under-Secretary-General of OCHA and the Emergency
Relief Coordinator (USG Holmes), and the United Nations Resident Coordinator
and Humanitarian Coordinator (RC/HC), Mr. Agostinho Zacarias, at the hearingin Nairobi.
12. On 10 February 2010, the Respondent submitted a list of potentialwitnesses, excluding USG Holmes and ASG Bragg.
13. By order UNDT/NBI/O/2010/015, dated 10 February 2010, the Tribunaldirected the Respondent to file a final list of witnesses and required the physical
presence of ASG Bragg, USG Holmes and RC/HC Zacarias at the hearing,
pursuant to article 9.2 of the UNDT Statute and article 16.5 of the Tribunal's
Rules of Procedure.
14. Pursuant to article 18.2 of its Rules of Procedure the Tribunal issuedanother order on 11 February 2010 to direct the Respondent to produce a copy of
the report of the Panel on Discrimination and Other Grievances (PDOG).
15. On 16 February 2010, the Applicant filed an application to amend his listof witnesses.
16. On 19 February 2010, the Respondent requested an amendment to OrderUNDT/NBI/O/2010/015 to direct that the testimony of two witnesses based in
New York be provided by video conferencing.
17. On 20 February 2010, the Applicant moved the Tribunal to dismiss theRespondent's motion, arguing that the physical presence of these witnesses was
essential.
18. In a motion dated 21 February 2010, the Respondent moved the Tribunalto order the Applicant to produce, prior to the hearing scheduled for 23 February
2010 the original audio file, which the Applicant claimed to be the recording of
his phone conversation with ASG Bragg on 25 January 2009.
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
5/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 5 of 104
19. A hearing was held from 23 to 26 February 2010 in Nairobi by the panelof three judges. The Applicant was represented by counsel from the Office of
Staff Legal Assistance ("OSLA") and two private lawyers from Amsterdam &Peroff LLP. The Respondent was represented by a team of counsel from the
Administrative Law Section, Office of Human Resources Management in the UN
Secretariat ("ALS/OHRM").
20. Counsel for the Applicant called two witnesses, Ms. Kerry Kay, Head ofthe NGO Helping Hands, which is located in Harare, Zimbabwe, and the
Applicant. Both witnesses were cross-examined by the Respondent.
21. At the close of proceedings on 26 February 2010, the Tribunal directed theparties to provide an amended list of witnesses. It further advised the parties that
they would receive further directions from the Tribunal, including a re-scheduling
of the hearing.
22. On 12 March 2010 the Respondent submitted six written statements andindicated that he would call four witnesses to give evidence viva voce at the
hearing.
23. On 15 March 2010, the Tribunal reiterated its order to the Respondent,requiring the physical presence of USG Holmes, ASG Bragg, and RC/HC
Zacarias. On the same day, the Respondent filed a witness statement by RC/HC
Zacarias. In response to the Tribunal's order requiring the presence of USG
Holmes, ASG Bragg and RC/HC Zacarias, the Respondent reiterated that these
witnesses could not travel to Nairobi for professional reasons to give evidence in
person at the hearing. The Respondent further indicated his intention to call
witnesses Rudolf Muller (based in OCHA New York and the Deputy Director of
the Coordination and Response Division (CRD), by video-conference from
Geneva, Switzerland, Ms. Maria de Lurdes Toms (an Administrative and
Finance Officer for OCHA Zimbabwe) by audio-conference from Harare,
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
6/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 6 of 104
Zimbabwe, and Roeland Monash (Deputy Representative of UNICEF) via video-
conference from Tbilisi, Georgia.
24. On 16 March 2010, the Respondent moved the Tribunal to direct theApplicant to submit the written statements of his witnesses as agreed on 26
February 2010.
25. On 18 March 2010, the Tribunal decided that the hearings would resumefrom 21 to 28 April 2010 and gave further directions to the parties.
26. On 22 March 2010, the Applicant filed a motion to strike out theRespondent's written witness statements and for an order requiring RC/HC
Zacarias' viva voce testimony.
27. On 23 March 2010, the Tribunal reiterated its order requiring the physicalpresence of witnesses ASG Bragg and RC/HC Zacarias at the hearing scheduled
to resume from 21 to 28 April 2010 in Nairobi. As for witness USG Holmes, the
Tribunal decided that he could be heard via video-conference.
28. On 29 March 2010, the Applicant filed a motion entitled "Urgent Motionfor an Order Excluding Non-Probative Material and Evidence from Proceedings",
seeking to exclude the witness statements filed by the Respondent on 15 March
2010, which were, in the view of the Applicant, aimed at defaming him.
29. On 31 March 2010, the Respondent filed his response to the above motion,submitting that the Applicant's motion was misconceived and should be rejected.
On 1 April 2010 by Order No. UNDT/NBI/O/2010/55 the Tribunal ruled that the
Applicants motion related to evidentiary issues and would be best dealt with at
the hearing.
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
7/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 7 of 104
Facts
30. The Applicant entered the services of the Organization in 1999 with theUnited Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS). He later joined OCHA as a
Senior Regional Advisor for the Southern Africa Humanitarian Information
Management Network in Johannesburg. In December 2007, the Applicant applied
for the position of HoO of OCHA in Harare, Zimbabwe, under a 200-series
contract. He went through a competitive process that lasted six months, and was
selected. He assumed duties on 24 March 2008.
31.
The Applicant underwent an orientation and induction in New York wherehe was given a briefing by Mr. Steve O'Malley of the CRD and other OCHA staff.
According to the Applicant, he was not briefed by USG Holmes but had a ten-
minute meeting with him
32. The Applicants fixed-term appointment was extended through 23 April2009 and thereafter, his appointment was variously extended as follows: from 24
April to 29 May 2009; from 30 May to 15 July 2009 but was further extended
through 2 August 2009 after the Applicant filed a Suspension of Action dated 10July 2009; and from 3 August 2009 to 3 September 2009. Following the
Respondents decision not to renew the contract beyond 3 September 2009 the
Applicant filed another application for a suspension of action, which was granted
on 1 September 2009.
33. According to the Applicant, the several decisions of the Respondent not torenew his fixed-term appointment started in January 2009. ASG Bragg informed
him by email dated 27 January 2009 that his contract would not be renewed basedon his performance. The email stated, inter alia, ...after discussion with senior
management, OCHA does not intend to renew your contract after its expiry on 23
March, 2009. The Applicant was, by the same email, asked to move to the
OCHA Regional Office in Johannesburg. Upon receipt of the email, the Applicant
filed a request to the Secretary-General on 27 January 2009 to review the
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
8/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 8 of 104
administrative decision not to renew his fixed-term appointment after its expiry on
23 March 2009. The Applicant also filed a request for suspension of action on 27
January 2009 seeking to suspend the implementation of the two administrativedecisions.
34. According to the records provided by the Applicant, the JAB consideredthe request for suspension of action and recommended that the request be rejected
on the ground, that the Applicant had not made a prima facie showing that the
implementation of the decision not to renew his 200-series contract would result
in irreparable harm, provided that certain conditions be met before the expiry of
his appointment on 23 March 2009. On 30 January 2009, the Secretary-Generalinformed the Applicant that he had accepted the JABs findings.
35. On 12 March 2009, the Applicant was again advised that his appointmentwould expire on 23 March 2009.
36. On 16 March 2009, the Applicant requested another suspension of actionagainst the non-extension of his contract, but OCHA subsequently extended the
Applicants appointment for a month through to 23 April 2009. In the light of that
extension the JAB did not take any action on this second request for suspension of
action.
37. On the same date, the Applicant filed a rebuttal against his 2008-2009performance appraisal (e-PAS). On 17 March 2009, the Administration
provided the Applicant with a list of names of OCHA staff members and
requested him to select three persons to serve as members of the Rebuttal Panel.
On 18 March 2009, the Applicant raised his concerns over the involvement of
OCHA staff members in the rebuttal. He requested that persons from other United
Nations agencies sit on the panel to avoid the risk of potential conflicts of interest.
38. On 20 April 2009, OCHA decided to proceed with the Applicant'sseparation effective 23 April 2009. On the same day, the Applicant filed a request
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
9/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 9 of 104
for suspension of action with the JAB challenging the decision not to renew his
appointment. A hearing was held on 22 April 2009 after which the Panel
unanimously decided to recommend the suspension of the contested action. Itfurther recommended that OCHA "make zealous efforts" to provide the Applicant
with a list of potential Rebuttal Panel members who were not OCHA staff
members and that the rebuttal process be conducted and finalised expeditiously.
39. On 23 April 2009, the Secretary-General accepted the JAB'srecommendation. Subsequently, the Applicant's contract was extended from 24
April to 29 May 2009.
40. On 27 May 2009, the Applicant submitted a Statement of Appeal to theJAB challenging the decision by OCHA not to renew his appointment. On 30 May
2009, the Applicant's contract was extended for two months and four days, until 2
August 2009.
41. On 1 June 2009, a Rebuttal Panel was convened to review the Applicant'se-PAS for the 2008-2009 performance cycle.
42. On 16 June 2009, OCHA advised the Applicant that his contract would notbe renewed beyond 15 July 2009 and on 10 July 2009, the Applicant requested
management evaluation of this decision with the Management Evaluation Unit
(MEU). He also filed a motion for suspension of action with the Dispute Tribunal
of OCHAs decision, dated 15 June 2009, not to renew his contract beyond 15
July 2009. Subsequently, OCHA decided to extend the Applicant's contract from
14 July 2009 to 2 August 2009, as a result of which the Applicant decided to
withdraw his request for suspension of action.
43. The Applicants appointment was once more extended from 3 August2009 to 3 September 2009. That extension was granted to enable the Applicant to
utilize his sick leave.
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
10/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 10 of 104
44. On 18 August 2009, the Applicant filed an application for suspension ofaction before the Tribunal of the decision not to renew his contract beyond 3
September 2009. He also sought a number of other reliefs. The suspension ofaction was granted by judgment UNDT/2009/016.
45. In a motion dated 2 September 2009, the Applicant requested the Tribunalto provide an interpretation of judgment UNDT/2009/016. The Respondent did
the same on 2 October 2009. The Applicant filed comments to the Respondent's
request for interpretation. Thereafter, the Respondent filed a reply to the
Applicant's motion for clarification.
46. On 21 October 2009, the Applicant filed an application for suspension ofaction of the decision by OCHA not to extend his contract beyond 3 November
2009. The Applicant's contract was then extended to 3 February 2010, rendering
the application for suspension of action moot.
47. On 30 October 2009, the Tribunal issued an interpretation judgment(UNDT/2009/058).
Preliminary matters
Applicants Motion for Interim Measures
48. On 2 March 2010, the Applicant requested the Tribunal to grant him twomonths net base salary as an interim measure during the proceedings, pursuant to
Article 14 of the Rules of Procedure. The Respondent requested that the Tribunal
dismiss the Applicant's motion for interim relief, stating that the Applicant had
been duly compensated for the period of January 2009 through February 2010 and
that payment of the outstanding balance concerning the Applicant's rental subsidy
in Harare would be made promptly. On 3 March 2010, the Respondent filed a
corrigendum to his response, revising the amount of the total payments made to
the Applicant.
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
11/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 11 of 104
49. By Order 052 (NBI/2010) dated 31 March 2010, the Tribunal granted theApplicant's motion for interim measures and directed the Respondent to pay him
the sum of two months' net base salary, within seven days of the Applicantsigning an undertaking to repay any sums which may be due to the Respondent
upon judgment being given by the Tribunal.
50. On 7 October 2010, the Respondent submitted a Motion forReconsideration of Order No. 052 (NBI/2010). The Respondent alleged that new
facts had emerged since the Tribunal granted interim relief of two months net
base salary to the Applicant on 31 March 2010, which demonstrated a level of
impropriety of the greatest ilk on the part of the Applicant. The Respondentsought to show that the Applicant misled the Tribunal in seeking interim relief.
According to the Respondent, the Applicant was allegedly appointed as a Director
in UNOPS at the P-5 level on 16 February 2010; was paid salary advances by
UNOPS in February and March 2010 to the tune of USD $17,500; sought to
enroll his new-born son on his Van Breda health insurance through OCHA in
March 2010, as well as continuing to accept half-salary payments, DSA payments
and other entitlements from OCHA up until 31 March 2010. The Respondent
submitted that the Applicant was obliged to notify the Tribunal of his employment
with UNOPS yet failed to do so, that the Applicant deceived UNOPS, and that
Order 052 (NBI/2010) ought to be reversed.
51. On 13 October 2010, the Applicant submitted his response to theRespondents Motion for Reconsideration. The Applicant sought to clarify the
dates of his employment with UNOPS, stating that he did not take up his post
until 15 April 2010; he explained that this was due to his waiting on medical and
visa clearance to travel to Abidjan which were not finalised until 12 April 2010.
The Applicant submitted that no salary advances could possibly have been made
to him by UNOPS before 13 April 2010, as this was the first day he was
recognised on the UNOPS payroll. Further, the Applicant provided evidence to
show that he was explicitly advised on two occasions by UNOPS not to resign
from his OCHA post until his appointment with UNOPS was completely
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
12/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 12 of 104
formalized. The Applicant submitted that the Respondents motion was a thinly
veiled attempt to malign him, so as to prejudice the outcome of the trial.1
52. On 21 October 2010, the Respondent filed additional documentationrelevant to the Motion for Reconsideration and on 25 October 2010, he filed a
reply to the Applicants response. The Respondent submitted evidence to show
that the Applicants appointment with UNOPS was effective 16 February 2010
and again insisted that the Applicant deceived UNOPS so as to continue receiving
payments from OCHA after he took up UNOPS employment. The Respondent
again requested that this Tribunal reconsider its Order granting interim relief.
53. On 26 October 2010, the Respondent filed a Motion to Re-open thehearing and recall the Applicant for further cross-examination. The Respondent
submitted that the new facts discovered were central to the Applicants case, and
that the Applicants failure to disclose them deprived the Tribunal of the
opportunity to assess the credibility of his submissions with reference to the
aforementioned new facts. The Respondent also sought the opportunity to cross-
examine the Applicant in light of the new facts, specifically with regard to his
failure to disclose them, his misrepresentations to the Tribunal in regard to hisfinancial status, as well as his fitness for work and career prospects, and his
misrepresentation to the Tribunal that he suffered loss as a consequence of
alleged harassment.
54. On 1 November 2010, the Applicant filed his response to the RespondentsMotion to Re-open the hearing and recall the Applicant for further cross-
examination, in which he very strongly submitted that there were no new facts
of which the Respondent i.e. the Organization itself was not aware, and that itis not counsels duty to seek to re-litigate once proceedings have closed. The
Applicant went so far as to seek confirmation from UNOPS about his early salary
payments, writing to BES-UNOPS on 11 October 2010 to ask why he was paid a
full months salary in April 2010, when in fact he arrived halfway through that
1 Applicants Response to Respondents Motion for Reconsideration of Order No. 52.
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
13/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 13 of 104
month. The Applicant provided a letter from the Regional Director of UNOPS as
evidence confirming that he did not start work with UNOPS until 15 April 2010.
55. The Respondent sought to show that the six-month delay in this requestillustrates the deceit of the Applicant. However, this Tribunal had already
accepted that earlier in 2010 the Applicant was in dire financial straits, and did not
consider this delay on the part of the Applicant to be an unreasonable one while
he concentrated on resolving his financial difficulties. The Applicant stated in his
email of 11 October 2010 If I was paid in error, I am ready for the recovery.
This statement, if anything, demonstrates honesty rather than deceit.
56. The Tribunal is of the considered view that these repeated allegationsmade by the Respondent against the Applicant are unnecessary, gratuitous and
intended to undermine the credibility of the Applicant before the Tribunal. Not
only are the additional submissions made by the Respondent totally unrelated to
the Applicants original application and the issues to be decided by the Tribunal,
they are primarily focussed on tarnishing the Applicants reputation before this
Tribunal by portraying him as deceitful, dishonest and manipulative and setting
out to double-dip across the OCHA and UNOPS payrolls. Evidence seeking toportray a partys negative character alone is not admissible. The first motion
submitted by the Respondent is merely incidental and does not correlate with the
central issue in this case. In the opinion of the Tribunal, the second motion has no
justification whatsoever and its very filing was unworthy of the Respondent and
caused distress to the Applicant.
57. The interim measures granted the Applicant in Order 052 (NBI/2010) werenot reversed, and the Respondents motion to recall the Applicant was denied. TheTribunal rejected that motion on the ground that Respondent had ample
opportunity to test all of these issues during the testimony of the Applicant and
other witnesses. The Tribunal finds that these two motions constitute an abuse of
process of the court.
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
14/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 14 of 104
Respondents motion to recall a witness
58. After RC/HC Zacarias had completed his testimony, Counsel for theRespondent made a motion to have him recalled for further examination on the
grounds that, as the Tribunal understood it, RC/HC Zacarias was dismayed,
disturbed, surprised and allegedly taken aback by the line of cross-examination he
was subjected to. The Tribunal rejected this motion on the grounds that no reason
was presented to explain whether there was any new element that may have taken
RC/HC Zacarias or Counsel for the Respondent by surprise. It is an elementary
principle of evidence that when a witness completes his or her testimony, it is on
very rare occasions that the witness may be recalled. This may happen when thereis a need for further clarification, or when any new evidentiary element, which
could not reasonably be foreseen has been discovered after his testimony.
Applicants case
59. The Applicant submits that the decision not to renew his contract as HoOOCHA Zimbabwe was taken in violation of his due process rights, as he was not
given a valid reason and he was not given a proper e-PAS. He was not offered a
mid-year review of his performance and a chance to improve any identified
shortcomings. He was served with an unfair e-PAS that had been hastily and
unilaterally prepared by OCHA and which grossly violated any relevant
provisions of ST/AI/2002/3. The Applicant also submits that the onus of proving
the non-performance is on management to show that he was properly evaluated, in
accordance with the Performance Appraisal System as set out in ST/AI/2002/3. In
this regard, the Respondent has not produced evidence of an e-PAS completed at
the appropriate time and in the appropriate manner.
60. The Applicant contends that the non-renewal of his contract was motivatedby bias and ill will. In support of this contention the Applicant has sought to
establish that: (i) the attitude of his direct supervisor, RC/HC Zacarias, was the
main factor that led to the termination of his contract; (ii) the campaign
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
15/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 15 of 104
orchestrated against him by his deputy, Mr. Farah Muktar, played a significant
part in his removal; (iii) the top management of OCHA in New York as
represented by USG Holmes, and ASG Bragg condoned the attitude of RC/HCZacarias who was making life difficult for him; (iv) the Muller Mission that was
sent to Zimbabwe to investigate the working of OCHA was in fact an
investigation on his performance that triggered his removal; and (v) the procedure
contained in the e-PAS rules was not followed.
61. The Applicant further avers that OCHA acted wrongfully against him andcaused severe prejudice to his career, in addition to physical injury to him. The
termination resulted in a series of contractual, administrative and financial abusesas well as other cruel measures of retaliation.
62. He also asserts that the Respondent tried to force him to withdraw his casefrom the MEU and the UNDT in exchange for a one-year extension.
Respondents case
63. The Respondent submits that this matter is about the decision not torenew the Applicants fixed-term appointment beyond its expiry date and argues
that it was not biased nor founded on extraneous factors as alleged by the
Applicant. The Respondent avers that the Organization complied with the
applicable rules and regulations and that the Applicant did not suffer any actual
detriment. He further submits that the decision not to renew his appointment was
justified in view of the Applicants non-performance.
64. The Respondent states that the Administration did not recommend thetermination of the Applicants appointment, but informed him that his contract
would not be renewed beyond 23 March 2009 and that this is in accord with the
well-established jurisprudence that 200 series posts are inherently temporary and
that staff members have no expectation of renewal.
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
16/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 16 of 104
65. The Applicant occupied a central role in the co-ordination of the deliveryof aid but he failed to perform at an adequate level for the functions of his post.
Further, he had been given opportunities to take corrective action and improve,which he failed to do. It is also the Respondents argument that the Applicants
inadequate performance adversely impacted on the delivery of humanitarian aid in
Zimbabwe at a critical time. In good faith, the Organization made efforts to find
an alternative placement for the Applicant, but it was not possible to do so.
66. With regard to the e-PAS, the Respondent refers to AdministrativeInstruction ST/AI/2002/3 which provides that a draft work plan for discussion
with the first reporting officer must be prepared by the staff member and it is the
responsibility of the first reporting officer to ensure that this occurs. In the present
case, it was the responsibility of both the staff member and management to ensure
that the performance appraisal procedure was complied with and, in fact, the
evidence has shown that the Applicant was abundantly aware of his duties and
responsibilities. He received the work plan for the office and worked on and
modified this work plan. Accordingly, the Applicant could have prepared and
submitted his individual work plan at any time. Furthermore, the Applicant knew
what the duties were from the terms of the Vacancy Announcement and he was in
receipt of the proposals of the executive coaching mission, which detailed the
break-up of duties between the HC and the HoO.
67. The Respondent acknowledges that there was some confusion in regard tothe Applicants reporting lines. The RC/HC thought that he was the Applicants
first reporting officer which in fact was the case. However, the Applicant
considered that he only reported to the RC/HC for limited duties, and not in
regard to his management role in the office. The Respondent submits that the
Applicant could have cleared this issue by drafting his individual plan and sending
it to either Mr. David Kaatrud (Director of the Coordination and Response
Division (CRD)) or RC/HC Zacarias or both. That would have started the
performance appraisal process in accordance with paragraph 6.2 (a) of
ST/AI/2002/3.
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
17/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 17 of 104
68. The Respondent submits that compliance could not have made anysubstantial difference to the outcome. The evidence demonstrates categorically
that the Applicant proved to be intransigent when confronted with issues of his
own performance. He would not have taken any corrective action or improved,
regardless of the form in which feedback was communicated to him.
69. As far as the attempt of the Administration to convince the Applicant towithdraw his case the Respondent avers that this contention is without merit as the
Respondent had made attempts to resolve the case informally. However, the
Respondent could not accept the conditions demanded by the Applicant for an
informal resolution.
The social and political climate in Zimbabwe at the material time
70. The events leading to the termination of the contract of the Applicantrevolved mainly around the social and political climate in Zimbabwe, which gave
much cause for concern. When the Applicant assumed duties as HoO of OCHA
Zimbabwe the social and political climate was very volatile and insecure, and the
humanitarian office in the country was having a difficult time.
71. OCHA had had a very difficult relationship with the Government for sometime. The existence of the OCHA office at different points in the previous two or
three years had been hanging by a thread, because the Government of Zimbabwe
did not always look with favour upon its activities and OCHA drawing attention
to humanitarian issues and humanitarian needs. OCHA faced a tricky balancing
act. The position of Humanitarian Coordinator was even trickier in some respects.
There was a difficult challenge because of food security issues and many
humanitarian issues, which the government was not particularly prepared to
accept or to help OCHA to deal with.2
2 Transcript of hearing of 6 July 2010 (hereinafter referred to as 6/7), p. 67.
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
18/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 18 of 104
Stakeholders and individuals involved in Zimbabwe at the material time
72. Given the nature of the case and the duties that the Applicant wasperforming in Zimbabwe at the relevant time, and the stance of the Respondent,
the Tribunal deems it necessary to first set out a list of all the persons involved
and of all the stakeholders that were in the field in Zimbabwe at the material time
for a proper understanding of the issues.
International organizations involved in humanitarian work in Zimbabwe at the
time
73. A number of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) were present inZimbabwe and they fell under the umbrella of what is referred to in the evidence
as NANGO. Among them were: CARE, Mdecins Sans Frontires (MSF), the
Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA) which was an organ of the
United States Agency for International Development (USAID) dealing with
disaster management, the World Health Organisation (WHO), and the Inter-
Agency Standing Committee (IACS), a body of all humanitarian agencies coming
together.3
Also mentioned were the United Nations Country Team (UNCT) made
up of United Nations agencies such as UNICEF and the World Food Programme
(WFP). There was also the national NGO Helping Hands.
OCHA
74. When the Applicant assumed duty in Harare as HoO, the Under-Secretary-General (USG) for Humanitarian Affairs and the Emergency Relief Coordinator
(ERC) was Mr. John Holmes. His deputy was Ms. Catherine Bragg, the Assistant
Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs. Ms. Bragg was also in charge of the
Zimbabwe desk. Mr. Zacarias was both the Humanitarian Coordinator and the
Resident Coordinator (RC/HC) in Zimbabwe.4 Mr. David Kaatrud was the
3 Transcript of hearing of 25 February 2010 (hereinafter referred to as 25/2), p. 504 Mr. Zacarias is referred to as HC, HC/RC or Zac in the evidence.
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
19/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 19 of 104
Director of the CRD based in New York. Mr. Rudolph Muller5
was the Deputy
Director of the CRD. Mr. Chris Hyslop was a Desk Officer in OCHA New York.
Ms. Rania Dagash of OCHA New York was assigned to the Zimbabwe desk. Mr.Farah Muktar was the Deputy Head of Office of OCHA Zimbabwe and therefore
second in command to the Applicant.
75. The CRD, the operations heart of OCHA is based in New York. It is thebase of the coordination/supervision of the country offices. There are also regional
offices around the world, particularly in Africa. The CRD is responsible for
drawing up the work plans, of supervising budgeting arrangements and for policy
decisions that are taken on humanitarian issues in any particular country. In short,
the CRD is a key player in advising the USG on issues relating to humanitarian
operations overseas.6
The Humanitarian Coordinator (HC) in Zimbabwe
76. The UN Humanitarian Coordinator, Mr. Zacarias, was responsible forthe good conduct of all the humanitarian operations in Zimbabwe. He also had
the responsibility for liaising with the government and persuading it to facilitate
humanitarian operations. He was also responsible for speaking out about
humanitarian issues and defending humanitarian principles. He chaired and
coordinated the activities of the humanitarian Country Team, which is a strategic
body designed to take decisions about humanitarian issues and the conduct of
humanitarian affairs in that country. This team brought together the United
Nations agencies, the NGOs and the Red Cross/Red Crescent Movement.
77. The HC was also the Resident Representative of the United NationsDevelopment Programme (UNDP) and UN Resident Coordinator.7 In this
capacity, his primary responsibility was to the United Nations Development
Group and to the Administrator of UNDP. He was responsible for the
5 Mr. Rudolph Muller is often referred to in the evidence as Rudi Muller.6 6/7 p.657 6/7 pp.63/64
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
20/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 20 of 104
coordination of development policy towards a particular country. He was also
responsible for many other aspects of policy, including gender and human rights.
He was usually the designated official responsible for security policy and securitydecisions in Zimbabwe.8
78. The role of a resident coordinator, especially when he is also ahumanitarian coordinator is to maintain a working relationship with the
government to which he is accredited. At the same time, because of wider issues
of concern in the United Nations system about the particular government at that
particular time, the HC was obliged to reflect those concerns as well, both
privately and publicly. So it was a very difficult balancing act. There were thosein the system who regarded Mr. Zacarias as performing that balancing act with
great skill in the circumstances by maintaining access and having influence with
government whilst not compromising principles. Yet there were others who
regarded him as being too close to the government.
The Head of the OCHA Office in Zimbabwe
79.
As HoO of OCHA Zimbabwe, the Applicant was entrusted with thefollowing responsibilities: to manage and lead the OCHA Office in Zimbabwe; to
support humanitarian programming/coordination in Zimbabwe; to support
humanitarian policy and leadership and other related matters.
80. USG Holmes explained in his testimony that the role of the head of theOCHA office in any particular country is to work directly for the humanitarian
coordinator and to liaise with not only him but also with the other main United
Nations agencies in the country and the NGOs. He or she ought to have a
relationship with the government and maintain the necessary balance between
having a productive and cooperative relationship with it, while at the same time
drawing attention to issues and on occasions saying things, which the government
may not find particularly palatable. This is the situation that faces any head of
8 6/7 p.92
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
21/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 21 of 104
office in any country where OCHA operates, but of course it can be more or less
difficult depending on the attitude of the particular government concerned.9
81. USG Holmes also stated that in the difficult environment, whichZimbabwe presented, the HoO OCHA needed to have good analytical skills, good
experience in humanitarian affairs, and good management skills. He had to have
good interpersonal skills to deal with and cooperate with not only the
humanitarian coordinator but also with the many other actors in the humanitarian
community including the government and the press. He needed also to have
coordination skills in order to be able to survive and prosper in that environment.
He needed to have the ability to understand, advocate for and defend humanitarianprinciples to fulfil the needs of the people OCHA is trying to help in any
particular state.
Issues for consideration
82. The issues to be addressed in this judgment include:
a. Whether the complaints leveled against the Applicant by the HCand others unreasonably and unlawfully influenced OCHA
managements decision not to renew his contract;
b. Whether the non-renewal of the Applicants contract wasmotivated by extraneous factors or improper motive;
c. The performance of the Applicant;d. Whether a proper performance appraisal was conducted in respect
of the Applicant;
e.
The true aim and effect of the Muller Mission to Zimbabwe and itsimpact on the non-renewal of the Applicants contract;
f. Whether OCHA observed the requirements of due process andfairness in the method it employed to separate the Applicant from
service as Head of Office of OCHA Zimbabwe;
9 6/7 p.60
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
22/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 22 of 104
g. Whether the Applicant suffered any moral damage as a result ofthe way he had been treated and, if so, to assess the degree of such
damage;h. Whether the manner in which these proceedings were conducted
on behalf of the Respondent amounted to an abuse of process or
which an order for costs would be appropriate under art. 10.6 of the
Tribunals Statute.
Whether the complaints leveled against the Applicant by the HC and others
influenced OCHA managements decision not to renew his contract
Complaints from the staff against the Applicant
83. Mr. Muller had a meeting with the staff while on the Zimbabwe mission.According to him, the national staff was more careful than the international staff.
There was a strong reaction from the administrative staff who said that they had a
difficult working relationship with the Applicant in view of his management style
and inadequate instructions. At meetings the Applicant would always reject the
views of others. On the national staff side, the assistant of the Applicant came
down very hard on him. The overall reaction of the national staff was mixed. Both
RC/HC Zacarias and Mr. Muktar told Mr. Muller that they had a feeling that the
Applicant was coaching them.10
84. Ms. Maria de Lurdes Toms who said that she had been with OCHA since2003 and worked under the Applicant as an Administrative and Finance Officer in
the Zimbabwe office testified on the behaviour of the Applicant. She had also
been in the Zimbabwe office when Ms. A.A.O was the head of OCHA. She stated
that the working environment had deteriorated a couple of months after the
Applicants arrival.
10 5/7, notes of presiding judge.
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
23/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 23 of 104
85. According to Ms. Toms, the Applicant would call the staff into his officeand lecture them without according them opportunity to speak.11 The question of
whether the Applicant used a tape recorder to record the conversations of staffmembers was disallowed in the absence of any evidence of such tape recordings.12
She stated that the Applicant would also threaten the staff that he could easily fire
them13 and that he could destroy whoever he wanted.14 He would often summon
staff to meetings that were not work-related.15 That feeling of suspicion did not
exist at the time Ms. A.A.O was the head of OCHA.16 She said that the staff was
isolated and suspicious during Mr. Tadonki's tenure.17
86.
Ms. Toms said that there was nothing positive about the presence of theApplicant18 and that he never provided proper and sufficient guidance. According
to the witness, Ms Muwani, the Applicants assistant told her that she had been
asked to spy on the staff.19 He also asked Ms. Loretta Bismark to do the same
thing20 and on one occasion, he came into her office and asked her repeatedly
whether somebody had filed a complaint of sexual harassment against him. The
witness said she felt harassed by this21
and that it was an abuse of power.22
87.
When Mr. Rudi Muller and Mr. Chris Hyslop came to Zimbabwe, thewitness said that she and other colleagues met them to express their concerns
about the work environment that had deteriorated under the leadership of the
Applicant and to ask them to help find a solution.23
11 Transcript of hearing of 8 July 2010 (hereinafter referred to as 8/7), p.5.12 8/7 pp.6/713
8/7 p.814 8/7 p.1115 8/7 p.1216 8/7 p.3117 8/7 p.3318 8/7 p.3119 8/7 pp. 17/1820 8/7 p.1921 8/7 p.2022 8/7 p.2123 8/7 pp. 22/23
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
24/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 24 of 104
88. The Applicant rejected the suggestion that there were criticisms by hisstaff of his management role. He explained that he did a 360-degree exercise in
his office for three months. Everybody in his office was given the latitude toexamine what he was doing in the office.24 He was confronted with a document
drawn up by Mr. Kaatrud following the Muller mission to Zimbabwe where it was
recorded as follows: On 19 November the mission called the HoO to get his
reflections on the debriefing. The HoO stated that in his opinion the mission was
too short a period to establish an accurate account of the OCHA Zimbabwe office.
He noted that he had used an authoritative style of management and was tough but
not abusive.25
89. The Applicant denied having said this and added that he never obtained acopy of the Muller report.26 He denied that he humiliated his staff27 or that he
would always lecture to them and almost never allowed them to talk during staff
meetings.28 He denied having installed a tape recorder in the office of his
secretary and told her that he was recording her conversations.29 He denied having
asked his staff to sign a petition to ask for his continued stay in Zimbabwe.30
90. On the last issue, he explained that when he received an email from ASGBragg informing him he had been dismissed, he invited his staff for lunch and
asked them to provide him with a letter of recommendation so that he could find
another job as he had been terminated. His staff told him that they had nothing
against him as mentioned by Mr. Muller. The only concern that they had was that
RC/HC Zacarias would come after them because it would look like they were
against him. And you don't know how bad he can be because he is the one who
signed our contract. We don't want to take that risk.31
24 Transcript of hearing of 26 February 2010 (hereinafter referred to as 26/2), p.5125 26/2 p.52 and Respondents Bundle Vol. 1 (hereinafter referred to as R1), p.75.26 26/2 p.5227 26/2 p.5328 26/2 p.5429 26/2 p.5630 26/2 p.5631 26/2 p.57
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
25/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 25 of 104
Other testimonies about the Applicants conduct
91. Mr. Marcellin Hepie, head of UNHCR in Zimbabwe in 2008, stated duringhis testimony that it was a fact that the Applicant was putting pressure on his staff
and this was so because he was a workaholic. The deputy head of office however,
told Mr. Hepie that he was disappointed with the Applicant.32
92. The Applicant, according to Ms. Kerry Kay, a witness called by theApplicant, was not abusive towards people. Whenever she attended his meetings
or went to meet him in his office, she observed the way he interacted with his staff
and the way his staff talked about him at the reception desk and concluded that the
staff really enjoyed him as he was open, polite and kind.33 Commenting on an
observation made in a document,34 where it is stated that the Applicant lacked
certain listening skills and that he needed to further develop his management,
team working and communication skills, Ms. Kay disagreed and added that his
communication skills were excellent.
Allegation of sexual harassment
93. The Applicant denied that he interrogated Ms. Toms to find out whether acomplaint of sexual harassment had been made against him by his assistant. He
had raised the matter at a staff meeting having heard such a rumour and learnt that
it was Ms. Toms who was behind the rumour. But he did have a conversation
with her and she told him that she was worried about the long hours the secretary
was working. That allegation was never the subject of any investigation as
provided for by the Staff Rules.35
94. Mr. Amsterdam, Counsel for the Applicant, intervened to move that all theevidence relating to the said allegation be struck off the record.36 He submitted
32 5/7, notes of presiding judge33 Transcript of hearing of 24 February 2010 (hereinafter 24/2), pp. 20/2134 Applicants Bundle Vol. 2 (hereinafter A2), 513 Para 31.35 26/2 pp.59/6036 26/2 p.69
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
26/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 26 of 104
that the issues in this case were not related to the allegation and it was the first
time in the course of the proceedings that this matter was being raised.37 He
continued that what was worse was that a totally unfounded allegation of sexualharassment was being used by Counsel for the Respondent to attempt to discredit
the Applicant.
95. Rules exist within the Organisation on how to deal with such a seriousallegation. An investigation would have allowed the Applicant to present his
version of events, and for the facts as presented by both parties to be properly and
independently verified. Although no investigation was carried out into these
allegations and there was absolutely no foundation or justification for such a lineof questioning, this allegation is used unashamedly by Counsel for the
Respondent. This is yet another indication of the length the Respondent was
prepared to go to downgrade and denigrate the Applicant. In the view of the
Tribunal, this is another example of abuse of process by the Respondent.
Criticisms of the Applicant by NGOs
96.
RC/HC Zacarias testified that the heads of agencies had a forum forcoordination of all international NGOs operating in Zimbabwe under an umbrella
organisation of the national NGOs, known as NANGO. There were more than
1,000 national NGOs and 56 international NGOs in Zimbabwe. The international
NGOs and the umbrella organisation, NANGO, called themselves the Heads of
Agencies.38
97. In July 2008 a letter39 purporting to emanate from the Heads of AgenciesChair was sent to RC/HC Zacarias, complaining about the Applicant. Ms. Rania
Dagash sent a copy of the letter to the Applicant and asked him to reply to ASG
Bragg on this. Ms. Dagash refused to tell the Applicant who had sent the letter.40
37 26/2 p.7038 Transcript of hearing of 7 July 2010 (hereinafter 7/7), p.39.39 Applicants Bundle Vol. 1 (hereinafter A1), p. 27440 24/2 p 51
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
27/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 27 of 104
The Applicant, who claims to have a wide knowledge of computers, said that
when he analysed the letter from a computer, he found out that the author was one
Stephen Vaughan, head of CARE,
41
an NGO in Zimbabwe.
42
When the Applicantconfronted him with the letter, he denied writing it and said the letter came from a
group.43
A second person, one Ms. Joanna Hiel from Mdecins du Monde (MDM)
had co-authored the letter.44 The Applicant responded by inserting his comments
in capital letters after each paragraph.45
98. In reply to a question, the Applicant answered that the two had authoredthe letter to serve the purpose of RC/HC Zacarias. Both these persons who
headed international NGOs needed the support of Mr Zacarias to obtainaccreditation to work in Zimbabwe. In the case of CARE, the government had
accused the NGO, under the leadership of Stephen Vaughan, of forcing rural
people to vote for MDC, the opposition party46 and it was the first NGO that the
government of Zimbabwe asked to close.47 As for MDM, they were having
problems getting visas to bring in more people and were operating with only two
persons.48
99.
On 23 September 2008,
49
Mr. Zacarias wrote to USG Holmes as follows:
Unfortunately, the current OCHA office in country is strife withtensions that have become visible through a number of incidentsinvolving OCHA staff and the Head of Office, the head of OCHAoffice and the members of the UN Country Team, which areaffecting relationships with partners in the NGO community anddonors, while eroding quickly trust and confidence in OCHA and
jeopardizing relations with government. In this context I mustshare with you in the strictest confidence that a key international
NGO representative informed me that they had intended to lodge aletter of protest against the head of OCHA, but subsequently opted
41 24/2 p.5542 24/2 p. 5443 24/2 p 5644 24/2 p 5945 A1 p. 27446 24/2 p.6447 24/2 p 6548 24/2 p.6649 A1 p.252
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
28/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 28 of 104
to simply bypass OCHA in terms of their operations. This is anundesirable operation at a time when we are all trying to cometogether as one.
With this concern in mind, I feel compelled to request that youdispatch your director of the coordination and response division toreview the current OCHA office and help address current internaltensions before they reach the public domain and tarnish OCHA'simage.50
100. It was the Applicants testimony that RC/HC Zacarias never mentioned to
him the letter or the dispatch of someone from the CRD to Zimbabwe.51
101. USG Holmes stated that it was not the practice of OCHA to encourage thehumanitarian coordinator and other agencies to report to OCHA or to comment on
the internal workings of an OCHA office. He always emphasised to the
humanitarian coordinators that they should not micromanage the OCHA office.
However, if people did send OCHA information on the internal workings of the
OCHA office, it could not simply be ignored.52
Criticisms from USAID
102. In a document titled Notes on a meeting held on 30 July 2008 at 08:15hours in OCHA office it is stated that USAID was informed that NGOs were
complaining that OCHA was not supporting them enough or keeping them fully
informed on the discussions between the government and the United Nations. The
Applicant said that NGOs had not conveyed these concerns to OCHA Zimbabwe,
that there were formal and informal channels for communication in the field, and
that it would have been easy for NGOs to use those channels to inform OCHA.
The Applicant added that he was willing to listen to the NGOs as this was part of
his role as head of OCHA.53
50 Transcript of hearing of 23 February 2010 (hereinafter 23/2), p.1151 24/2 p. 7152 6/7 p.11753 R1 p.15/16/17
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
29/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 29 of 104
103. The document also contained "Recommendations from USAID" on theneed for OCHA to look for ways to improve communication with NGOs and
donors by meeting with the donor community more frequently. It wenton to saythat the United States of America can be very supportive if OCHA keeps the
dialogue with them open.
104. OFDA is one of OCHAs major donors within USAID. In the light ofUSAIDs recommendations, it was suggested to the Applicant that the head of
OFDA, Mr. Ky Luu, was not convinced that the Applicant was performing. 54 The
Applicant rejected this suggestion and stated that the date of the meeting should
be put in its proper context as it took place on 30 July 2008, at a time when theywere all confined in Harare as a ban was in force. Mr. Luu arrived during this
period when nobody could move and he seemed not to be aware of it.55
105. Secondly, the complaints made by Mr. Luu were about humanitarianleadership. He was asking why the United Nations could not defy the
government, and according to the Applicant the concerns were more about the
humanitarian coordinator rather than him. He tried to explain to Mr. Luu that he
was not the right person for these issues. Pushing the government was the job ofthe HC and not OCHA.56
106. And lastly, Mr. Luu was also making recommendations. He wanted astrong OCHA that had a strong relationship with the government, and that was
exactly what the HC did not want. The HC did not want the OCHA office to be in
contact with the government or to be that strong.57
Complaints about the overall attitude of the Applicant
107. USG Holmes explained that the behaviour of the Applicant related to workperformance because many of the partners he was operating with, the major
54 26/2 p. 855 26/2 p. 956 26/2 p. 957 26/2 p. 9
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
30/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 30 of 104
United Nations agencies, the major NGOs and some donors had serious problems
relating with him. They found his attitude patronising and lecturing and he was
not providing the right kind of relationships, which OCHA needed.
58
108. In a note to USG Holmes on 27 October 200859 regarding a meeting shehad with the Applicant, ASG Bragg expressed some concerns about the overall
attitude of the Applicant towards the HC and the fact that he was reluctant to
listen to the views of others. USG Holmes discussed the contents of that mail with
ASG Bragg and agreed with the conclusion she had reached about the Applicant,
namely that they were having a very serious problem with him. The Applicant
was not listening to the points that were being made about him and he did not
seem inclined to take any corrective action. USG Holmes added that there was a
significant problem with the personal attitude of the Applicant in his dealings with
the rest of the humanitarian community and that it was extremely worrying.60
109. According to USG Holmes, the Applicant had become aware of the issuesin relation to him and was in a position to take corrective action but was unwilling
to do so.61 This was after the complaint from the NGOs, after the difficulties he
had with other members of the United Nations Country Team and with the
Humanitarian Coordinator about his behaviour. He was in denial about these
problems and was inclined to attribute them exclusively to some kind of
conspiracy against him, led by the Humanitarian Coordinator and perhaps by his
deputy as well.62
110. USG Holmes testified that steps were taken to assist the Applicant inrelation to the behavioural component, which affected his performance. He stated:
I gave instructions that there should be a time when I was communicating with
Zac about the problems that he was part of. I made it clear to my colleagues in
the Coordination Response Division that we should be taking up these issues with
58 6/7 p.11859 R1 p.5860 6/7 p.7561 6/7 p.8062 6/7 p.76
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
31/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 31 of 104
Georges himself to make sure that he recognised that there were problems there
and did something about it.63 The Tribunal finds, however, that there was no
clear indication as to how and when OCHA actually took any steps to address theissue.
111. ASG Bragg had written to him: The overwhelming impression from theconversation was that [the Applicant] perceived himself to be the only one who
could see the situation in Zimbabwe clearly.64 She added that I do believe that
from that meeting it was quite apparent to me that [the Applicant] did not
understand that there is a pattern of relationship difficulties and that because of
the work that we do is so much dependent on relationship, our job is coordination.We are not like other humanitarians. We do not actively deliver food. We don't
do concrete things. All of what we do is dependent on relationship. And when
we have a head of OCHA office in a course of a 90 minute meeting seems to me
to have little grasp of a pattern of relationship difficulties, that causes me some
concern.65
112. In another mail sent to Mr. Gaby Douek of CRD dated 27 October 2008,ASG Bragg wrote in relation to the Applicant: The view of some donors and
NGOs was in fact that he was seen as too close with the government. The ASG
heard speculation that he [the Applicant] might have encouraged the government
to thwart a mission by the ASG to Zimbabwe in order not to have his performance
examined up close.66
113. She did not ask the Applicant why he stopped her from going toZimbabwe but wrote also: I mentioned that I had heard that he might be too close
to the government and as part of that might not have been supportive to mymission. To which, in my recollection - and this is now a recollection 18 months
after or whatever number of months after our conversation - my recollection was
63 6/7 p.11164 Transcript of hearing of 10 July 2010 (hereinafter 10/7), p.965 10/7 p.1066 10/7 p.29 & R1/58
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
32/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 32 of 104
that he vehemently denied that he was too close to the government, and he said
that if he had been close to the government, he would have received his
accreditation by then. And I think that was the extent of our exchange on thatmatter.67
114. ASG Bragg testified that she received other unfavourable reports about theApplicant. She referred to a discussion with the government of Canada where she
was told that the OCHA office in Zimbabwe was one of the weakest globally but
they were not saying the Applicant was a poor manager.68
115. She told the Tribunal that she heard from the CRD desk that managed theOCHA office that they were not getting sufficient information on the situation in
Zimbabwe and that the reporting had been very inadequate.69
116. According to her, people she talked to in USAID told her that Mr. Luu(head of OFDA) had gone to Zimbabwe and was very unhappy with the OCHA
office and with the OCHA head of office. She did not have any documentation on
this.70 There was also some complaint from ECHO, which is the humanitarian
office of the European Commission.71
117. It is strange that in the light of the several complaints from differentquarters, which ASG Bragg said she received, she did nothing to verify them. In
accusing the Applicant of using the Zimbabwe Government to stop her from
visiting the Country, she made no effort to verify the Applicants influence with
the Government but instead dwelt on suspicion and hearsay. Her said discussions
with the Canadian Government about the Applicants performance were not
recorded and she did not verify the adverse information about the Applicant from
CRD. There is no doubt that this said criticisms against the Applicant affected her
67 10/7 p.2968 10/7 p.569 10/7 p.570 10/7 p.871 10/7 p.8
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
33/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 33 of 104
opinion of him. And somehow went on to take the place of a proper appraisal
process.
118. In an email to RC/HC Zacarias dated 14 May 2008, Mr. Festo Kavishe,Head of UNICEF at the time levelled a number of criticisms against the Applicant
that included: lack of preparedness to deal with the humanitarian situation in
Zimbabwe; providing wrong assessments; the unwillingness of the Applicant to
listen to concerns raised by many members of the United Nations Country Team;
the negative image of the Country Team that the Applicant had given to donors
and NGOs; his lack of managerial and people skills that prevented him from
playing a constructive role in spite of his excellent technical skills and inability orrefusal to listen.
119. The Applicant for his part stated that RC/HC Zacarias and Mr. Kavishewere good friends, although the former denied that he had directed Mr. Kavishe to
forward the letter72 to him because he was sensitive about the fact that he had had
a problem with the last two heads of office.73
Mr. Zacarias rejected the suggestion
that he sent a strong letter to USG Holmes criticising the Applicant, together with
the letter of Mr. Kavishe because his aim was to undermine the Applicant before
the latter could undermine him since he felt he was on the way out after having
two other heads of OCHA office leave.74
120. In a letter to ASG Bragg on 16 November 2008 the Applicant had statedthat in hiring short-term consultants, he was interrupted by UNDP and that this
jeopardised the CAP.75 RC/HC Zacarias explained that he was not aware of
UNDP interrupting the CAP because the CAP exercise was done by OCHA and
agencies that were involved in it. He explained that he was briefed that the
Applicant had not followed the procedure on the recruitment of consultants.76
72 R1 p.1073 7/7 pp.74/7574 7/7 pp.75/7675 A1 p.304 Para 376 7/7 p.84
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
34/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 34 of 104
121. RC/HC Zacarias rejected the suggestion that Mr. Gwynne Vaughan, Mr.Kavishe and some others were his pawns; that he knew that he could not get rid of
the Applicant himself because he had already gotten rid of two others andtherefore was procuring third parties to destroy the Applicant instead of helping
him. He added that if there had been conditions for dialogue with the Applicant he
would have brought these issues directly to him. He had never suggested that the
Applicant should be removed.77
122. In a mail dated 23 September 200878 to USG Holmes, RC/HC Zacariasinformed the USG that NGO representatives had signified their intention of
lodging a protest against the Applicant. In relation to that mail, USG Holmes
explained that his office needed to know if a Humanitarian Coordinator or the
head of the OCHA office was effectively interacting with members of the
humanitarian community in Zimbabwe since the job of the OCHA office is
coordination which by definition involves maintaining good relationships with all
those with whom the office was trying to coordinate.79
123. He testified that initially when he heard about the issues between thehumanitarian coordinator and the OCHA head of office, he believed in his mind
that the Humanitarian Coordinator was causing problems again. But as the year
went on, and as the message became sharper from outside and elsewhere in the
system, it became clear that there was a problem with the management of the
OCHA office, which was impinging on OCHAs operations in Zimbabwe.80
124. On 16 April 2008 RC/HC Zacarias had sent an email81 to David Kaatrudto complain about the way that the Applicant was proceeding with his mandate. In
brief, he was complaining that the Applicant had presented a contingency plan
without prior discussions with colleagues at the Country Team. He also
complained about the Applicant involving donors at a special meeting of the
77 7/7 p.8678 R1 p.3379 6/7 p.7280 6/7 p.7281 R1 p.1
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
35/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 35 of 104
IACS and that he had thus created an expectation that donors would be invited to
all meetings. The Government of Zimbabwe would believe that the humanitarian
mission in Zimbabwe was donor-controlled which might result in the destructionof all that had been built with the Zimbabwe government. RC/HC Zacarias sought
the guidance of David Kaatrud on how to address the situation although he
claimed that he had spoken with the Applicant and had reached an understanding
with him.
125. The Applicant told the Tribunal that there was no discussion between himand RC/HC Zacarias on these issues and that the email was sent without his
knowledge.
82
He said that it was impossible for him alone to write a contingencyplan and that he coordinated with the agencies to do it. The allegation that he did
not discuss it with United Nations colleagues was wrong, and indicated the kind
of perception that RC/HC Zacarias had of his job. It was not the job of the head of
OCHA to write a contingency plan but to bring people together to prepare the plan
with the help of his team. All that the contingency plan contained came from the
agencies and not from OCHA.83
Response and measures taken by Applicant to address humanitarian concerns inZimbabwe
126. The Tribunal heard evidence that the Regional representatives of WFP,UNICEF and OCHA visited Zimbabwe from 19 to 21 May 2008 with the aim of
exploring and identifying ways of supporting the evolving operational and
programme requirements of the United Nations Country Team and its partners.84
Some of the recommendations approved by that mission included the initiation of
the Humanitarian Weekly Technical Coordination Meetings chaired by OCHA,
the weekly donor meetings with the RC/HC and the formation of the United
Nations Crisis Management Team. These were positive steps in the right direction
82 25/2 p. 45/4683 25/2 p. 4584 A1 p.150
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
36/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 36 of 104
towards ensuring more coordinated and inclusive response planning.85
When he
arrived in Zimbabwe the Applicant established Humanitarian Weekly Technical
Coordination Meetings that did not exist before.
86
127. That mission also recommended:Given the deteriorating situation, there is an urgent need to ensurethat OCHA is in a position to meet the demands of addressing thecurrent crisis, in particular in ensuring that: 1) there is a robust andappropriate UN response to the current crisis; 2) coordination andinformation management function effectively, and in the context ofhumanitarian reform, to systematically identify needs, gaps andrequired capacities; 3) assistance is provided in a principal manner.
This requires: formal acceptance and open endorsement of the roleof OCHA in the UNCT in keeping with its mandate and global
practice. This includes giving OCHA greater latitude and perhapsgreater capacity, in carrying out its operational role; andclarification of its status to the government. It is the mission's viewthat only through the above actions will OCHA be enabled to meetits responsibilities in the country
87
128. According to the Applicant, the mission showed how seriously the UnitedNations Regional Director of Southern and Eastern Africa took the case of
Zimbabwe. That mission visited Zimbabwe as a result of the early warning wherethe Applicant had mentioned the deteriorating situation in Zimbabwe. The
mission wanted to see if the early warning that he had given to OCHA was
validated. It was clear that the Mission found that OCHA Zimbabwe was not
ready, and they made a number of suggestions which included:
[T]he issue of NGO membership in the HC-chaired IASCdecision-making fora should be immediately resolved, with anagreement for a manageable number of NGOs to be core members.
Steps should be taken to ensure that all thematic areas needed to
address the response are fully functioning, whether it be as clusteror pre-existing groups. Fully functioning means meeting thefollowing core commitments: 1) the establishment of appropriatecoordination with all humanitarian partners (including national andinternational NGOs, the International Red Cross/Red Crescent
85 A1 p.153, para. 1786 Transcript of hearing of 23 February 2010 (hereinafter 23/2), p.4787 23/2 p.46/47 and A1 p.153, Para 18
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
37/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 37 of 104
Movement, IOM and other international organizations); 2) jointneeds assessment and/or consolidation of vulnerability data; 3) thedevelopment of common analysis; 4) objective setting,
prioritization of needs, identification of gaps in coverage; and 5)common and strategic planning to address gaps.
The UNCT should urgently seek to identify thematic areas that arenot working and rectify the problem, in particular by consideringwhich clusters could benefit from an injection of technicalexpertise and/or capacity in order to become functional. Themission was particularly concerned that health group may benefitfrom some external support.
Given the current crisis, the HC-convened IASC decision-makingfora should meet much more frequently than once a month. Themission suggests at least weekly. If the HC cannot chair this
meeting, the task should be delegated to the OCHA Head of Officeor an agency head.
The donor meeting should be representative of the entire donorcommunity so as to avoid misperception about its purpose andintent.
88
129. The Applicant thereafter prepared a Humanitarian Response Plan89 as afollow up to the recommendations of the May mission so that his office could
come up with a guide for one common analysis of the situation in Zimbabwe as a
basis for the Consolidated Appeal Process (CAP), which is the way humanitarianagencies come together to analyse the humanitarian situation in a given context
and also come up with response plans and projects.90
130. The Applicant explained that the cluster approach is very important intodays humanitarian field. One of the major problems in Zimbabwe was the
inability to implement the cluster approach i.e. the bringing together of all of the
different organisations around specific sector issues rather than having separate
meetings with them. One of the instructions the Applicant was given when he was
in New York for his induction was to make sure that the cluster approach was
implemented because this makes these agencies accountable. As an example, he
stated that when cholera broke out in Zimbabwe, the civil society, the donors, and
88 A1 p.153 & 154 Para 19 -2189 A1 p.18390 23/2, p. 70/71
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
38/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 38 of 104
the United Nations were entitled to ask the coordinator of the health cluster what
was being done. The Applicant said he assisted the World Health Organisation
(WHO) to implement their cluster.
91
131. The CAP for 2007/2008 was worth around USD360 million of projects.The CAP that the Applicant coordinated in 2009 was estimated at around USD690
million.92
On the cluster approach and the role of OCHA, Mr. Hepie, the head of
UNHCR in Zimbabwe, wrote: Given the magnitude of the crisis and its nature,
the predictability of the cluster approach has not always followed the global
cluster arrangement. Nevertheless, as an advisory and coordination body, OCHA
has managed to inject some synergy in the various clusters and working Groups toachieve desired results, under a difficult operational environment. Critical
technical groups meetings were called by OCHA, on weekly basis for the on-
going crisis.
132. According to the Applicant, NGO activity was a very serious issue whenhe arrived in Zimbabwe. The NGOs were completely cut off from the
Humanitarian Coordinator. This was a major issue, as donors and NGOs go hand
in hand.93
The donors and the NGOs were not happy with the way RC/HC
Zacarias was handling humanitarian leadership and coordination.94 So the
Applicant tried diplomatically to convince RC/HC Zacarias that the approach
should change as he had received instruction from New York that there was need
to establish a real coordination in the field there.95
133. In the view of the Applicant there was a need to have a strong OCHAoffice in Zimbabwe to stand up to the government. Unfortunately OCHA was not
recognized by the government and had no mandate on political issues, a domain
reserved for the HC. Everything had been done to lift the ban on NGOs, but to no
avail. NGOs, the United Nations and donors had tried to engage with the
91 23/2 p.4992 23/2 p.7293 23/2 p5194 23/2 p3595 23/2 p35/36
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
39/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 39 of 104
government but without any success. During political violence, the United
Nations had helped victims. OCHA had tried its utmost to support the NGOs
within the rules of the United Nations. The United Nations had been instrumentalin getting an MOU signed between the MDC and ZANU PF (the main political
parties in the country) on the need to put an end to violence and to help victims
including internally displaced persons. In the wake of the 29 March elections
OCHA had stepped up traditional humanitarian coordination in Zimbabwe.96
134. The participation of NGOs, IASC and working groups was secured. AWeekly Humanitarian Technical Coordination Meeting was established by OCHA
with the endorsement of the RC/HC that brought together donors and NGOs butnot the government. OCHA raised the alarm that since the results of 29 March
elections were uncertain this might lead to dramatic consequences. OCHA was
also worried about the closure of the humanitarian space and the spread of
political violence. The Applicant raised the issue of how OCHA Zimbabwe could
be supported in facilitating the restoration of a humanitarian space in Zimbabwe
that would be fully open and impartial, with less political interference and that
really focused on the most vulnerable people in the country.97
135. Ms. Kay testified that through her work she had a lot to do with the NGOs,the IOM, ICRC and other organisations. According to her, the Applicant was
considered to be very open and efficient by the NGO community. By reputation
RC/HC Zacarias was not well liked by the NGOs. He would spend most of his
social time with a Mr. Nicholas Goche, an old ZANU-PF politburo member and
former head of the Central Intelligence Organisation from 2000 to 2004. Although
she did not personally see that, it was common knowledge.98 The NGOs never
spoke of the Applicant in a disparaging way.99
She was of the view that the
Applicant had satisfied the needs of the NGOs that she interacted with but that
RC/HC Zacarias did not, because of his tendency not to listen to what was
96 R1 p.1597 R1 p.1698 24/2 p. 3399 24/2 p20
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
40/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 40 of 104
happening or going to happen.100
From the few times that she had met Mr.
Zacarias she found him to be arrogant and he did not appreciate hearing the truth
of what was going on.
101
136. According to the witness, RC/HC Zacarias seemed to not take cognisanceof the fact that there was likely to be widespread and unprecedented violence. The
Applicant would always be warning agencies and politicians about the situation.
She added that had the Applicants and her warnings been taken seriously, the
atrocities that took place could have been prevented. Ms. Kay said she did a lot
with the Applicant in trying to find funding and ways to assist internally displaced
peoples (IDPs) who were the victims of violence. She had approached the UnitedNations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) offices in Harare to seek
assistance for the IDPs.102
137. She testified also that the issue of IDPs in Zimbabwe was very important,and that the government of Zimbabwe had always been in denial of the
humanitarian situation in the country and that was why it did not want an OCHA
office. For the first time in December 2008 the government recognised that there
was a humanitarian situation. There was a press statement issued by the Ministryof Foreign Affairs on that issue and they even used the report103 prepared by the
Applicant for that purpose.
138. In a report entitled End of Year Cycle Review 2008 on OCHAZimbabwe,104 an evaluation was done on the work of the office on the
humanitarian situation in Zimbabwe. According to the Applicant that report
presented OCHA Zimbabwe as a successful office.105 One of the issues raised in
the report was that
106
in addition to regular monthly humanitarian reports, OCHAissued weekly situation reports during the elections, daily cholera updates in
100 24/2 p. 28101 24/2 p. 33102 24/2 p.16103 A1 p.183104 A2 p.519105 25/2 p.17106 A2 p.520
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
41/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 41 of 104
collaboration with WHO and that weekly cholera situation reports were prepared
and disseminated throughout the cholera emergency. The Applicant explained that
all of this was done during his tenure as HoO OCHA Zimbabwe.
107
The reportalso mentioned that a significant level of advocacy has been made on ensuring
that access to the needy population by humanitarians is opened and
unhindered.108 This was to the Applicants credit and contrary to the adverse
comments that had been made against him by senior management.
139. The Applicant also referred to how his OCHA office intervened to findshelter for victims of violence in Ruwa. He indicated that for the OCHA office to
be more effective in its role for regaining humanitarian access there was a need toput the humanitarian situation on the agenda through an active role of the United
Nations Secretary-General along with the permanent representatives of African
countries on Zimbabwe.109 On 26 June 2008 about 387 Zimbabwean women and
children had invaded the car park of the South African embassy and asked for
asylum.
140. On the same day, there was a group of about one hundred people in frontof the US embassy, but they were not allowed in and RC/HC Zacarias went there
but later left. The Applicants team was following the events and went there too.
The police were ready to round up those people. The Applicant remained with
some of his staff as he tried to find a solution and the priority was the protection
of the people there. The presence of the Applicant with his team in that car park
was a deterrent, as the government of Zimbabwe could not round up the people in
front of OCHA staff. The Applicant and his team reached an agreement with the
police for shelter to be provided to these people. This was known as the Ruwa
incident.110
This was another positive contribution made by the Applicant and for
which he deserved credit.
107 25/2 p. 18108 25/2 p. 18109 R1 p.15 & 16110 A1 p.212
-
7/28/2019 Tadonki vs. Secretary-General of the United Nations
42/104
Case No. UNDT/NBI/2009/36
JudgmentNo.: UNDT/2013/032
Page 42 of 104
141. According to the Applicant, the United Nations could not use the termInternally Displaced People (IDPs) as is the international practice. They were
called mobile and vulnerable population in order to protect RC/HC Zacariasbecause he had the job of dealing with the government, and the government did
not want to hear certain things. It did not want to hear that there were forcibly
displaced Zimbabweans and such language mentioned in a report would
embarrass RC/HC Zacarias. The Applicant said that there were about two million
IDPs in the region of Murabantsvina, a fact referred to in the report of Mrs. Anna
Tibaijuka, the Special Envoy of the then Secretary-General, Mr. Kofi Annan, and
considered as coming from OCHA. Mr. Zacarias told the Applicant that this
caused him a lot of trouble. The use of m